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The Maid of Buttermere

On sale

21st June 2012

Price: £10.99

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Selected: ebook / ISBN-13: 9781848942585

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‘This is historical fiction with a human face’
Peter Ackroyd, The Times

‘A vivid and erudite tour de force’
Penelope Lively, Booker Prize-winning author of Moon Tiger

‘A skilled, ornate and convincing examination of a nineteenth-century scandal in Bragg’s own Cumbria’
Thomas Keneally, Booker Prize-winning author of Schindler’s Ark

Set in the Lake District in the early nineteenth century, this is a riveting story of love and deception, and a scandal that shook the entire nation.

Reviews

Penelope Lively
A vivid and erudite tour de force
Peter Ackroyd, The Times
This is the story of an impostor and bigamist, a self-styled Colonel Hope, who travels to the North, where eventually he marries "The Maid of Buttermere", a young woman whose natural beauty inspired the dreams and confirmed the theories of various early nineteenth-century writers . . . It is a fine story . . . This is historical fiction with a human face
Thomas Keneally
A skilled, ornate and convincing examination of a nineteenth-century scandal in Bragg's own Cumbria
Mail on Sunday
A detailed, eloquent and affecting panorama of truth and lies . . . thrusts [him] into the front rank
Beryl Bainbridge
A triumph . . . I am overwhelmingly impressed
Sunday Times
Bragg achieves the most difficult of feats, the telling of the changing perceptions and ideals of a radical age . . . He is also as powerful as ever in his description of nature
Daily Mail
A terrific tale of passion, lust, deception and moral outrage.
Sunday Telegraph
Bragg writes with picturesque clarity; his prose accommodates the formality of the period, the splendidly sombre wateriness of the place and the robust passions of the people who lived there
Irish Times
A fine novel, both sad and tragic. His background descriptions are beautiful . . . while his evocation of the early nineteenth century, and his handling of the ever-interesting topic of English snobbery is impeccable
Glasgow Herald
Compelling . . . Painted on a broad canvas, packed with detail, with characters, with interesting psychological issues, and sallies into the history of the years 1802-1803
Richard Holmes
Very much enjoyed; a fine subject treated with great energy and imagination, and a gusto that Hazlitt would have admired
Gore Vidal
An ingenious telling of a romantic tragedy